Selected Product: | The Heritage Guide to the Constitution Hardcover Author: Edwin Meese, Matthew Spalding, David F. Forte Publisher: Regnery Publishing, Inc. Release Date: 2005-11-07 ISBN-10: 159698001X ISBN-13: 9781596980013 List Price: $35.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning ISBN-10: 0385511841 ISBN-13: 9780385511841 List Price:$27.95 The Federalist Papers (Signet Classics) ISBN-10: 0451528816 ISBN-13: 9780451528810 List Price:$7.95 The Politically Incorrect Guide(tm) to the Constitution (Politically Incorrect Guides) ISBN-10: 1596985054 ISBN-13: 9781596985056 List Price:$19.95 The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States of America ISBN-10: 1882577981 ISBN-13: 9781882577989 List Price:$4.95 Heritage Pocket Guide to the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States ISBN-10: 0891951121 ISBN-13: 9780891951124 List Price:$5.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Heritage Guide to the Constitution by Edwin Meese, Matthew Spalding, David F. Forte (ISBN-10: 159698001X, ISBN-13: 9781596980013). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Heritage Guide to the Constitution by Edwin Meese, Matthew Spalding, David F. Forte (ISBN-10: 159698001X, ISBN-13: 9781596980013). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This guide is the first of its kind, and presents the U.S. Constitution as never before, including a clause-by-clause analysis of the document, each amendment and relevant court case, and the documents that serve as the foundation of the Constitution. Great gift for graduate | Customer Rating: | | This is an excellent resource for anyone who wants to understand the U.S. Constitution, but especially for high school and college graduates who know they want to go into law as a vocation. My grandson, who just graduated from high school, was really pleased that I gave it to him, since he's planning to study Constitutional Law. | Tax Avoiders Will NOT like this book!! YEA!!! | Customer Rating: | | I have a friend whose son is adamant that the Federal Income Tax is illegal(16th Amendment)...so I purchased this book...looked up the 16th amendment...and sure enough it is VERY LEGAL...only kooks try to avoid paying it...well I copied the pertinant pages from this book and gave them to her so that she could pass them on to her law-breaking son...If you really want to know what the LAW OF THE LAND is ...then read this book...read it multiple times and please read it to your children...so that they understand our Constitution. | Best Originalist Guide to the Constitution available | Customer Rating: | | With each clause of the Constitution placed in historical context and reviewed in light of recent Supreme Court precedents, this academic tome brings together the brightest young and old minds in conservative and libertarian legal thought, including Eugene Volokh, Nelson Lund, Claire Priest, and countless others. Indispensible guide to anyone interested in an original meaning view of the Constitution. Not a better guide out there for originalist scholarly thought. | A Marvelous Book! | Customer Rating: | | Every American Citizen should read this book. Understanding the relationship between citizenship and the rules by which the people authorize governance are very well described. With the press for democracy in the world, we tend to forget that the United States is not a democracy but a republic. Likewise, compliance with the Constitution prevents the establishment of an aristocracy. With the current arrogance of elected officials, we as a people have an obligation to become better informed on the roots of our sovereign law (which comes from the people) and what should be enforced; and that enforcement comes from our knowledge of the Constitution! The Heritage Foundation has done a superb service for all Americans in preparing this guide! | Balanced, scholarly, excellent | Customer Rating: | Edwin Meese was head of the editorial board for this guide, which is put out by the Heritage Foundation. That might suggest to some people that there's a conservative slant to the guide, but those people would be wrong. The Heritage Guide was first brought to my attention by a very liberal aquaintance who praised it to the skies, and then by a very conservative colleague who likewise praised it highly. They both had good reasons to praise it.
The Guide takes you through the entire text of the Constitution, line by line, article by article, starting with a three-page discussion of the preamble. It's written by around 100 contributors, all of them well-regarded experts in law and political science. Their discussion of even contentious topics (e.g., Amendment II or privacy rights) is dispassionate and clear, laying out for the reader the history and the case law behind contemporary constitutional issues and avoiding value judgements. The contributors write without legal jargon and with admirable directness, making the Guide accessible (not just accessible, but even enjoyably readable) to anyone with a good highschool education. The sophistication of their discussion, though, makes it suitable also for university students at all levels and for anyone who has any interest at all in the U.S. Constitution. No matter what your position is on presidential war powers or gun control, you come away from this guide with a clear and concise understanding of how the legal debate got where it is now. Each article in the Guide is followed by cross references to other passages in the Constitution, suggestions for further research, and a list of significant cases touching on the particular Article and Section of the Constitution discussed. Thus the Guide isn't just good reading on its own, but an excellent tool and springboard for further research on any constitutional topic.
This book should be required reading for university undergraduates, and for at least those few who will fall under my power next year, it will be. I intend to use this book in my classes on "Law and Literature" and "Law and Economics" as required supplementary reading. It will help clarify class discussions that revolve around constitutional issues, improve student papers, and make my students better informed citizens of the United States. That last one is the real payoff for everyone. I recommend this book far beyond the mere number of stars by which Amazon allows me to rate it. |
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